Species attracting
attention:
genus J..
The species below (from genus J..) have attracted recent attention in the
literature.
Samples of their keyword and crop use/product entries from the Website
may assist in explaining the recent increase in mentions in the literature.For
keywords: Species, family and the term Internet resources have been omitted,
below;
the number after each keyword is the number of papers in which the keyword and
the species have been mentioned together.
Larger numbers will be more reliable.

Footnote re
most likely scope for crop use/product: When there are only a few papers
mentioning a species, care should be taken with the interpretation of these
crop use/product results; as well, a mention may relate to the use of a
species, or the context in which it grows, rather than a product.
Examples are provided below (1-9, and superscripts in the crop use/product
column, above) for those terms which were influenced in this manner:1[Some species were identified as “cereal” but were actually
species frequently associated with cereals, perhaps as weeds of cereal crops]2[Some species were identified as “grain legume” but were
actually species frequently associated with grain legumes, such as weeds of
grain legume crops]3[Some species were identified as “honey” but were actually
studies on flower structure or pollination] 4[Some species were identified as “oilseed/fat” but were
actually species frequently associated with oilseeds, such as weeds of oilseed
crops]5[Some species identified as “pesticide” were not sources of
pesticides but were commercial crops whose production requires pesticides]6[Some species were identified as “pseudocereal” but were
actually species frequently associated with pseudocereals in some manner]7[This term referred to plant species that provide or require
shade]8[This term referred to plant species whose product may be used
for smoking but also includes those species whose seeds may require smoke to
germinate]9[This term identified plant species that naturally grow amongst
timber in a forest (or on timber, such as a lichen), as well as those with a
timber product; it also identified some species whose product may have been
described as “woody”]

Grateful
acknowledgment is made to the following: for plant names: Australian Plant Name
Index, Australian National Herbarium
http://www.anbg.gov.au/cpbr/databases/apni-search-full.html; ; The International
Plant Names Index, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Harvard University
Herbaria/Australian National Herbarium http://www.ipni.org/index.html; Plants
Database, United States Department of Agriculture, National Resources
Conservation Service http://plants.usda.gov/;DJ Mabberley (1997) The Plant
Book, Cambridge University Press (Second Edition); JH Wiersma and B Leon (1999)
World Economic Plants, CRC Press; RJ Hnatiuk (1990) Census of Australian
Vascular Plants, Australian Government Publishing Service; for information:
Science Direct http://www.sciencedirect.com/; Wiley Online Library
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/advanced/search; High Wire
http://highwire.stanford.edu/cgi/search; Oxford Journals
http://services.oxfordjournals.org/search.dtl; USDA National Agricultural
Library http://agricola.nal.usda.gov/booleancube/booleancube_search_cit.html;
for synonyms: The Plant List http://www.theplantlist.org/; for common names:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page; etc.

All information is
included in good faith but this website does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy
of any information on these pages, nor does the website accept responsibility
for any loss arising from the use of this information. Views and opinions
are those of the authors themselves. Every effort has been made to
respect copyright owners' rights.